Europe | Sea of troubles

Corruption at the heart of his party wounds Spain’s prime minister

Pedro Sánchez is a survivor, but it is getting harder

Spain’s PM Sanchez holds a press conference after a Socialist ruling party senior official Cerdan quitted over corruptio
Photograph: Reuters
|MADRID|3 min read

PEDRO SÁNCHEZ came to power in 2018 through a censure motion that ousted his conservative predecessor, Mariano Rajoy, after a court found the centre-right People’s Party (PP) had practised “institutionalised corruption”. Mr Sánchez promised “democratic regeneration”. But he and his Socialist Party have now come almost full circle. After a judge released a police report containing devastating evidence of systematic corruption by two of Mr Sánchez’s closest party aides, a sombre prime minister apologised eight times at a press conference on June 12th. He promised a shake-up in the party leadership and an external audit of its finances. That is unlikely to be enough to restore his authority, or perhaps even to save his job.

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This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “The leader’s sea of troubles”

From the June 21st 2025 edition

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